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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Chasey
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
01/31/08
02/08/08 HB 546/aHAFC
SHORT TITLE Tobacco Settlement Fund Programs
SB
ANALYST Geisler
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY08
FY09
$4,000.0 Non-recurring
Tobacco Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Relates to HB 2, HB 40
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Department of Health (DOH)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of HAFC Amendments
The House Appropriations Committee amendments to House Bill 546 will appropriate up to $4
million in additional tobacco settlement program funds if revenues in FY09 exceed the $21
million already appropriated from tobacco settlement program funds in the General
Appropriation Act of 2008. The amended appropriations will be prorated based on the amount
of revenue above $21 million. As amended, HB 546 is no longer in conflict with HB 2. The
HAFC amendments also allocated the additional potential funding to the following:
Up to 1/2 of any additional revenue to the human services department for Medicaid program
expenditures (not to exceed $2 million);
Up to 5/16 of any additional revenue to DOH for smoking cessation and prevention programs
(not to exceed $1.25 million).
Up to 1/8 of any additional revenue to DOH for diabetes prevention and control services (not
to exceed $250 thousand);
Up to 1/16 of any additional funding to the Indian Affairs Department for tobacco cessation
and prevention programs for Native American communities throughout the state (not to
exceed $250 thousand).
pg_0002
House Bill 546/aHAFC – Page
2
Synopsis of Original Bill
House Bill 546 would appropriate $3,000,000 from the tobacco settlement program fund to the
Department of Health (DOH) for expenditure in FY09 for tobacco use cessation programs and
$1,000,000 to DOH for expenditure in FY09 for diabetes prevention, education and outreach.
Any unexpended balance remaining at the end of FY09 would revert to the tobacco settlement
program fund.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
Both the Executive and Legislative base FY09 operating budget recommendations contain
$585,000 from general funds and $1,000,000 from Tobacco Settlement funds for diabetes
prevention, education and outreach activities and $9,115,000 in Tobacco Settlement funds for
tobacco cessation and prevention.
HB 546 is proposing an additional $1,000,000 from tobacco settlement program funds to fund
diabetes prevention, education and outreach and an additional $3,000,000 also from tobacco
settlement funds for tobacco cessation and prevention. However, the $21 million that is
projected to be available in the tobacco settlement program fund for FY09 has already been
allocated by House Appropriation Committee Action on HB 2.
Recently, the Attorney General reported there is no reason to change the tobacco master
settlement agreement payment estimate. Department of Finance and Administration (DFA)
analysts have informed the LFC that no more money than has been estimated to exist in the fund
can be appropriated.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has increased its recommendation for
annual tobacco control funding in New Mexico to $23.4 million (CDC Best Practices for
Comprehensive Tobacco Control Programs, October 2007). HB546 would bring the
DOH/Tobacco Use Prevention and Control Program (TUPAC) closer to the CDC Best Practices
recommendation. DOH/TUPAC FY08 funding is $9.1 million, 39% of the CDC Best Practices
funding level. Increasing DOH/TUPAC funding to $12.1 million would bring the state funding
level to 52% of the CDC Best Practices funding level. The more states spend on sustained
comprehensive tobacco control programs, the greater the reductions in smoking. (CDC Best
Practices, October 2007).
The economic burden of tobacco-related illnesses and deaths is staggering. Annual smoking
costs in New Mexico are $928 million. This represents $461 million for direct medical costs and
$467 million for lost productivity (indirect costs for absenteeism and forfeited future earnings
due to smoking-caused morbidity and premature deaths) (www.tobaccofreekids.org).
Approximately one in ten adults, or 150,300 New Mexicans, has diabetes (Behavioral Risk
Factor Surveillance System [BRFSS], 2006 and the University of New Mexico Bureau of
Business & Economic Research, modified 2006 NM population estimates). People with diabetes
are at risk for limb amputations, blindness, end-stage kidney disease and cardiovascular disease
(CDC, 2004). Children are at increasing risk for type 2 diabetes due to increasing rates of
obesity, poor nutrition, and lack of physical exercise.
pg_0003
House Bill 546/aHAFC – Page
3
Costs for medical care and lost productivity for a person with diabetes average more than
$13,000 per year and current estimates are almost $2 billion a year for the state (estimated
forward based on data from a 2002 Diabetes Care study). With diabetes on the rise, especially
among children, these costs are increasing. Of New Mexicans without diabetes, more than half
are overweight or obese and one in five do no leisure-time exercise (BRFSS, 2006), increasing
their risk for diabetes. A New England Journal of Medicine (Vol. 346, No. 6, 2/7/02) study
indicated that one of every seven cases of diabetes could be prevented in at-risk populations over
a three-year period through exercise and diet.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
DOH notes that they may need to utilize a small portion of the appropriation for program
administration. DOH/TUPAC administers 72 professional services contracts with the $9.1
million in current funding. These contractors are operating at full capacity meaning that the
additional funds would be used to support additional contractors. One FTE can effectively
oversee eight contracts. The added $3 million would translate into approximately 24 new
contracts and three additional FTE. Distribution of the added appropriation for diabetes
activities would require application and/or Request for Proposal (RFP) processes. The increase in
administrative workload would require one additional FTE to address the added workload.
CONFLICT AND RELATIONSHIP
HB 546 is in conflict with HB 2, which has already allocated the $21 million projected to be
available for the tobacco settlement program fund in FY09. HB 546 relates to HB 40, which
would appropriate $1,000,000 of general funds for diabetes prevention, education and outreach.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
Tobacco use disproportionately affects certain populations. In New Mexico, smoking rates are
highest among adults who are young (18-24 years), low-income, low education, the unemployed,
the uninsured, and among lesbian, gay, and bisexual individuals (Adults and Tobacco in NM:
2005 Report). DOH/TUPAC is committed to addressing tobacco-related health disparities
through the implementation of the Tobacco-Related Disparities Strategic Plan 2005-2010.
Addressing tobacco-related disparities is integrated into activities and planning wherever
appropriate.
Populations experiencing diabetes-related disparities include Native Americans, Hispanics,
African Americans, and rural communities. Native Americans in New Mexico are about twice
as likely to be diagnosed with diabetes as non-Native Americans and non-Hispanics. Hispanics
are about 1.5 times more likely to be diagnosed with diabetes than non-Hispanics (BRFSS,
2006).
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